Album Title
Lake Street Dive
Artist Icon Free Yourself Up (2018)
heart off icon (0 users)
Last IconTransparent icon Next icon

Transparent Block
Cover NOT yet available in 4k icon
Join Patreon for 4K upload/download access


Your Rating (Click a star below)

Star off iconStar off iconStar off iconStar off iconStar off iconStar off iconStar off iconStar off iconStar off iconStar off icon



Star IconStar IconStar IconStar IconStar IconStar IconStar IconStar IconStar IconStar Icon









3:33
3:38
4:20
3:11
5:33
4:11
4:21
3:46
5:46
4:43

Data Complete
percentage bar 60%

Total Rating

Star Icon (0 users)

Back Cover
Transparent Block

CD Art
Transparent Icon

3D Case
Transparent Icon

3D Thumb
Transparent Icon

3D Flat
Transparent Icon

3D Face
Transparent Icon

3D Spine
Transparent Icon

First Released

Calendar Icon 2018

Genre

Genre Icon Pop

Mood

Mood Icon ---

Style

Style Icon Rock/Pop

Theme

Theme Icon ---

Tempo

Speed Icon Medium

Release Format

Release Format Icon Album

Record Label Release

Speed Icon Nonesuch

World Sales Figure

Sales Icon 0 copies

Album Description
Available in:
"Free Yourself Up" is the sixth studio album by multigenre band Lake Street Dive. It was released through Nonesuch Records Inc on 4 May 2018.
wiki icon


User Album Review
Rachael Price's voice comes at you like a muscle car of music history, blues and bebop detailing on a classic soul 'n' rock chassis, and her band's latest set comes with songcraft grown tighter and more polished, shrewdly conjuring retro pleasures per usual. The funky-pop strut "Shame Shame Shame," for example, isn't the 1974 Shirley and Company proto-disco hit. But it might make for an excellent mash-up with it, and like its predecessor, can be read as a timely dress-down of a barefaced President on impeachment’s brink, though it also works fine as general-purpose bad-dog-scolding.
Like the whole set, it's expertly-crafted and likable, but rarely as gripping as its models. Sassy touches help throughout: the disco synth filigree on "Baby, Don't Leave Me Alone With My Thoughts;" the wonky Seventies heavy-rock guitars on "You Are Free;" the playfully brazen, self-deprecating wit of "Good Kisser." Elsewhere, though, boilerplate, occasionally dubious rhymes ("We used to kick it like Joe and Obama/Now you just leave me at home playing mama") and comfort-food hooks sell the band short. The highlights show off their ace chops in less predictable ways. For Price that's the ballads "I Can Change" and "Musta Been Something," the latter articulated with her tastefully spectacular held notes and a blue trumpet on the outro. For the rest of the band, that's anything that lets 'em stretch, like the untucked jam capping "Dude" and especially the set-closer "Hang On," which takes the form of an old A.M. radio anthem, but spiked with tricky changes that remind you this is a jazzbo crew at root. Would that the rest of the LP remind you of that more often.
Reviewed by Will Hermes for rollingstone.com.



External Album Reviews
None...



User Comments
seperator
No comments yet...
seperator

Status
Locked icon unlocked

Rank:

External Links
MusicBrainz Large icontransparent block Amazon Large icontransparent block Metacritic Large Icon